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Dive into the research topics where Roger J. Mulder is active.

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Featured researches published by Roger J. Mulder.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Ending Aging in Super Glassy Polymer Membranes

Cher Hon Lau; Phuc Nguyen; Matthew R. Hill; Aaron W. Thornton; Kristina Konstas; Cara M. Doherty; Roger J. Mulder; Laure Bourgeois; Amelia C. Y. Liu; David Sprouster; James Sullivan; Timothy J. Bastow; Anita J. Hill; Douglas L. Gin; Richard D. Noble

Aging in super glassy polymers such as poly(trimethylsilylpropyne) (PTMSP), poly(4-methyl-2-pentyne) (PMP), and polymers with intrinsic microporosity (PIM-1) reduces gas permeabilities and limits their application as gas-separation membranes. While super glassy polymers are initially very porous, and ultra-permeable, they quickly pack into a denser phase becoming less porous and permeable. This age-old problem has been solved by adding an ultraporous additive that maintains the low density, porous, initial stage of super glassy polymers through absorbing a portion of the polymer chains within its pores thereby holding the chains in their open position. This result is the first time that aging in super glassy polymers is inhibited whilst maintaining enhanced CO2 permeability for one year and improving CO2/N2 selectivity. This approach could allow super glassy polymers to be revisited for commercial application in gas separations.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Metabolic Engineering Camelina sativa with Fish Oil-Like Levels of DHA

James R. Petrie; Pushkar Shrestha; Srinivas Belide; Yoko Kennedy; Geraldine Lester; Qing Liu; Uday K. Divi; Roger J. Mulder; Maged P. Mansour; Peter D. Nichols; Surinder Singh

Background Omega-3 long-chain (≥C20) polyunsaturated fatty acids (ω3 LC-PUFA) such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosapentaenoic acid (DHA) are critical for human health and development. Numerous studies have indicated that deficiencies in these fatty acids can increase the risk or severity of cardiovascular, inflammatory and other diseases or disorders. EPA and DHA are predominantly sourced from marine fish although the primary producers are microalgae. Much work has been done to engineer a sustainable land-based source of EPA and DHA to reduce pressure on fish stocks in meeting future demand, with previous studies describing the production of fish oil-like levels of DHA in the model plant species, Arabidopsis thaliana. Principal Findings In this study we describe the production of fish oil-like levels (>12%) of DHA in the oilseed crop species Camelina sativa achieving a high ω3/ω6 ratio. The construct previously transformed in Arabidopsis as well as two modified construct versions designed to increase DHA production were used. DHA was found to be stable to at least the T5 generation and the EPA and DHA were found to be predominantly at the sn-1,3 positions of triacylglycerols. Transgenic and parental lines did not have different germination or seedling establishment rates. Conclusions DHA can be produced at fish oil-like levels in industrially-relevant oilseed crop species using multi-gene construct designs which are stable over multiple generations. This study has implications for the future of sustainable EPA and DHA production from land-based sources.


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2007

Protic Ionic Liquids and Ionicity

Bharathi Nuthakki; Tamar L. Greaves; Irena Krodkiewska; Asoka Weerawardena; M. Iko Burgar; Roger J. Mulder; Calum J. Drummond

Protic ionic liquids (PILs) are a subset of ionic liquids formed by the equimolar mixing of a Bronsted acid and a Bronsted base. PILs have been categorized as poor ionic liquids. However, the issue of assessing the ionicity of PILs is still a matter of debate. In this work we studied some physicochemical properties of three chosen PILs, namely, ethanolammonium acetate (EOAA), 2-methylbutylammonium formate (2MBAF), and pentylammonium formate (PeAF), at the initial equimolar (stoichiometric) acid/base ratio and in the presence of excess acid and base. DSC phase-transition studies along with NMR, IR, and Raman spectroscopy were performed on the chosen PILs. The results are discussed in terms of the degree of ionization (extent of proton transfer from the Bronsted acid to Bronsted base), and the possibility of the formation of polar 1:1 complexes and larger aggregates in the neat stoichiometric PILs.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

A Synthetic Resilin Is Largely Unstructured

Kate M. Nairn; Russell E. Lyons; Roger J. Mulder; Stephen T. Mudie; David Cookson; Emmanuelle Lesieur; Mi-Sook Kim; D. Lau; Fiona H. Scholes; Christopher M. Elvin

Proresilin is the precursor protein for resilin, an extremely elastic, hydrated, cross-linked insoluble protein found in insects. We investigated the secondary-structure distribution in solution of a synthetic proresilin (AN16), based on 16 units of the consensus proresilin repeat from Anopheles gambiae. Raman spectroscopy was used to verify that the secondary-structure distributions in cross-linked AN16 resilin and in AN16 proresilin are similar, and hence that solution techniques (such as NMR and circular dichroism) may be used to gain information about the structure of the cross-linked solid. The synthetic proresilin AN16 is an intrinsically unstructured protein, displaying under native conditions many of the characteristics normally observed in denatured proteins. There are no apparent alpha-helical or beta-sheet features in the NMR spectra, and the majority of backbone protons and carbons exhibit chemical shifts characteristic of random-coil configurations. Relatively few peaks are observed in the nuclear Overhauser effect spectra, indicating that overall the protein is dynamic and unstructured. The radius of gyration of AN16 corresponds to the value expected for a denatured protein of similar chain length. This high degree of disorder is also consistent with observed circular dichroism and Raman spectra. The temperature dependences of the NH proton chemical shifts were also measured. Most values were indicative of protons exposed to water, although smaller dependences were observed for glycine and alanine within the Tyr-Gly-Ala-Pro sequence conserved in all resilins found to date, which is the site of dityrosine cross-link formation. This result implies that these residues are involved in hydrogen bonds, possibly to enable efficient self-association and subsequent cross-linking. The beta-spiral model for elastic proteins, where the protein is itself shaped like a spring, is not supported by the results for AN16. Both the random-network elastomer model and the sliding beta-turn model are consistent with the data. The results indicate a flat energy landscape for AN16, with very little energy required to switch between conformations. This ease of switching is likely to lead to the extremely low energy loss on deformation of resilin.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Protic ionic liquids with fluorous anions: physicochemical properties and self-assembly nanostructure

Yan Shen; Danielle F. Kennedy; Tamar L. Greaves; Asoka Weerawardena; Roger J. Mulder; Nigel Kirby; Gonghua Song; Calum J. Drummond

A series of 11 new protic ionic liquids with fluorous anions (FPILs) have been identified and their self-assembled nanostructure, thermal phase transitions and physicochemical properties were investigated. To the best of our knowledge this is the first time that fluorocarbon domains have been reported in PILs. The FPILs were prepared from a range of hydrocarbon alkyl and heterocyclic amine cations in combination with the perfluorinated anions heptafluorobutyrate and pentadecafluorooctanoate. The nanostructure of the FPILs was established by using small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS and WAXS). In the liquid state many of the FPILs showed an intermediate range order, or self-assembled nanostructure, resulting from segregation of the polar and nonpolar hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon domains of the ionic liquid. In addition, the physicochemical properties of the FPILs were determined including the melting point (T(m)), glass transition (T(g)), devitrification temperature (T(c)), thermal stability and the density ρ, viscosity η, air/liquid surface tension γ(LV), refractive index n(D), and ionic conductivity κ. The FPILs were mostly solids at room temperature, however two examples 2-pyrrolidinonium heptafluorobutyrate (PyrroBF) and pyrrolidinium heptafluorobutyrate (PyrrBF) were liquids at room temperature and all of the FPILs melted below 80 °C. Four of the FPILs exhibited a glass transition. The two liquids at room temperature, PyrroBF and PyrrBF, had a similar density, surface tension and refractive index but their viscosity and ionic conductivity were very different due to dissimilar self-assembled nanostructure.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013

Parallel Screening of Low Molecular Weight Fragment Libraries Do Differences in Methodology Affect Hit Identification

Jerome Wielens; Stephen J. Headey; David I. Rhodes; Roger J. Mulder; Olan Dolezal; John Joseph Deadman; Janet Newman; David K. Chalmers; Michael W. Parker; Thomas S. Peat; Martin J. Scanlon

Fragment screening is becoming widely accepted as a technique to identify hit compounds for the development of novel lead compounds. In neighboring laboratories, we have recently, and independently, performed a fragment screening campaign on the HIV-1 integrase core domain (IN) using similar commercially purchased fragment libraries. The two campaigns used different screening methods for the preliminary identification of fragment hits; one used saturation transfer difference nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (STD-NMR), and the other used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy. Both initial screens were followed by X-ray crystallography. Using the STD-NMR/X-ray approach, 15 IN/fragment complexes were identified, whereas the SPR/X-ray approach found 6 complexes. In this article, we compare the approaches that were taken by each group and the results obtained, and we look at what factors could potentially influence the final results. We find that despite using different approaches with little overlap of initial hits, both approaches identified binding sites on IN that provided a basis for fragment-based lead discovery and further lead development. Comparison of hits identified in the two studies highlights a key role for both the conditions under which fragment binding is measured and the criteria selected to classify hits.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Constraints within major histocompatibility complex class I restricted peptides: presentation and consequences for T-cell recognition

Alexander Theodossis; Carole Guillonneau; Andrew David Welland; Lauren K. Ely; Craig S. Clements; Nicholas A. Williamson; Andrew I. Webb; Jacqueline A. Wilce; Roger J. Mulder; Michelle Anne Dunstone; Peter C. Doherty; James McCluskey; Anthony W. Purcell; Stephen J. Turner; Jamie Rossjohn

Residues within processed protein fragments bound to major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) glycoproteins have been considered to function as a series of “independent pegs” that either anchor the peptide (p) to the MHC-I and/or interact with the spectrum of αβ-T-cell receptors (TCRs) specific for the pMHC-I epitope in question. Mining of the extensive pMHC-I structural database established that many self- and viral peptides show extensive and direct interresidue interactions, an unexpected finding that has led us to the idea of “constrained” peptides. Mutational analysis of two constrained peptides (the HLA B44 restricted self-peptide (B44DPα–EEFGRAFSF) and an H2-Db restricted influenza peptide (DbPA, SSLENFRAYV) demonstrated that the conformation of the prominently exposed arginine in both peptides was governed by interactions with MHC-I-orientated flanking residues from the peptide itself. Using reverse genetics in a murine influenza model, we revealed that mutation of an MHC-I-orientated residue (SSLENFRAYV → SSLENARAYV) within the constrained PA peptide resulted in a diminished cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response and the recruitment of a limited pMHC-I specific TCR repertoire. Interactions between individual peptide positions can thus impose fine control on the conformation of pMHC-I epitopes, whereas the perturbation of such constraints can lead to a previously unappreciated mechanism of viral escape.


Polymer Chemistry | 2012

The scope for synthesis of macro-RAFT agents by sequential insertion of single monomer units

Shadi Houshyar; Daniel J. Keddie; Graeme Moad; Roger J. Mulder; Simon Saubern; John Tsanaktsidis

The scope for synthesis of new macro-RAFT agents (Z–C(S)S–(M)–R) by sequential insertion of monomers (M) ‘one at a time’ into an initial RAFT agent (Z–C(S)S–R) has been explored. The process is illustrated with the preparation of a styrene-N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAM) co-dimer macro-RAFT agent [(CH3)3C(CN)–CH2CH(Ph)–CH2CH(CONHiPr)–SC(S)–S-alkyl] by successive single unit monomer insertions into a cyanoisopropyl trithiocarbonate. Critical factors for success are a high transfer constant for the RAFT agent and a high rate of addition of the radical (R·) to monomer relative to further propagation. With these conditions satisfied, the rate of reaction is largely determined by the rate of R· adding to monomer. Initiator-derived by-products (Z–C(S)S–(M)–I) become an issue when R· is different from the initiator-derived radical (I·).


Journal of Computer-aided Molecular Design | 2001

Design and synthesis of type-III mimetics of ω-conotoxin GVIA

Jonathan B. Baell; Stewart A. Forsyth; Robert W. Gable; Raymond S. Norton; Roger J. Mulder

Our interest lies in the rational design and synthesis of type-III mimetics of protein and polypeptide structure and function. Our approach involves interactive design of conformationally defined molecular scaffolds that project certain functional groups in a way that mimics the projection of important binding residues as determined in the parent structure. These design principles are discussed and applied to the structurally defined polypeptide, ω-conotoxin GVIA, which blocks voltage-gated, neuronal N-type calcium channels. These ion channels represent therapeutic targets for the development of new analgesics that can treat chronic pain. It is shown how a discontinuous, 3-residue pharmacophore of GVIA can be mimicked by different molecular scaffolds. It is illustrated how such 1st generation leads must necessarily be weak and that optimisability must therefore be built-in during the design process.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Small Molecule Inhibitors of the Ledgf Site of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Integrase Identified by Fragment Screening and Structure Based Design.

Thomas S. Peat; David I. Rhodes; Nick Vandegraaff; Giang Thanh Le; Jessica A. Smith; Lisa J. Clark; Eric Dale Jones; Jonathan Coates; Neeranat Thienthong; Janet Newman; Olan Dolezal; Roger J. Mulder; John H. Ryan; G. Paul Savage; Craig L. Francis; John Joseph Deadman

A fragment-based screen against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) integrase led to a number of compounds that bound to the lens epithelium derived growth factor (LEDGF) binding site of the integrase catalytic core domain. We determined the crystallographic structures of complexes of the HIV integrase catalytic core domain for 10 of these compounds and quantitated the binding by surface plasmon resonance. We demonstrate that the compounds inhibit the interaction of LEDGF with HIV integrase in a proximity AlphaScreen assay, an assay for the LEDGF enhancement of HIV integrase strand transfer and in a cell based assay. The compounds identified represent a potential framework for the development of a new series of HIV integrase inhibitors that do not bind to the catalytic site of the enzyme.

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Ezio Rizzardo

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Graeme Moad

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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John H. Ryan

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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